"No" is the best answer to this question.
Meat is not a source of fiber. You can get protein from meat. Fiber comes from plants. If you are looking for fiber in your diet you can eat meat, but you need to eat meat with something that is going to provide the fiber you want. Grill your steak, but don't forget the corn and the barbecue beans.
Meat is not a significant source of Fiber. Some good sources of fiber are fruits, vegetables, and Sun chips.
No. Meat has no fiber in it at all.
The Western diet is typically high in meat and low in fiber.
The Western diet is typically high in meat and low in fiber.
Meat doesn't have fiber in it. Vegetarians eat foods high in fiber.
the meat of the pineapple
meat and dairy products
No. Fiber comes from fruits, grains, and vegetables. A meat-heavy diet is the antithesis of high-fiber. Case in point: in pre-industrial Europe the poorer classes who lived on bread and produce were much healthier than the meat-eating, gouty upper classes.
Meat and dairy products- apex
Generally speaking, the Western diet tends to be high in meat and low in fiber.See also the Related Link.Eating healthily
Foods that have fiber in them are derived from plants. Foods derived from animals, on the other hand (meat, cheese, eggs, milk) have no fiber.
Fiber helps push meat through the system so it don't rot in the colon and cause cancer ....leave a piece of meat out in about 90 degree heat and see what happens to it after 3 days ....then ask yourself if you want that going through your body.....take fiber everyday and that meat will go through your system in one day, before it rots.